National bands, dated and labeled

What Does Commercial Floor Care Cost in Corpus Christi?

No verified Corpus Christi competitor publishes broad square-foot pricing. These July 2026 national ranges are comparison tools; the provider's measured written quote is the price for the facility.

Last updated July 2026

Commercial floor-maintenance equipment arranged from burnishing through recoating to full stripping
$0.50–$1.50 strip and waxNormal-condition national planning band as of July 2026; the provider's measured written quote controls.
$0.20–$0.40 scrub and recoatUse when the upper finish is worn but the clean lower system remains bonded.
Open-by-morning planScheduled backward from handback, cure, coats, humidity, HVAC, reset, and an agreed fallback.

Facility facts before finish

What are realistic floor-care price bands per square foot?

Use roughly $0.50–$1.50 per square foot for a normal commercial strip-and-wax planning range. Published sources run from $0.25–$0.70 for standard work to $0.50–$3.00 across broad conditions, while Homewyse's January 2026 small-job calculation is $1.72–$2.15. None is a Corpus Christi offer.

Use about $0.20–$0.40 for scrub-and-recoat and $0.04–$0.08 for burnishing. Some published recoat references reach $0.12–$0.22 and VCT strip references $0.25–$0.50. Date, market, scope, and minimums differ. The useful comparison begins only after a walkthrough confirms floor type, measured area, condition, access, and maintenance rung.

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Which July 2026 numbers can you use to challenge a quote?

For stripping and waxing: Smart Janitorial publishes $0.25–$0.70 per square foot with premium work $0.85 or more; a Detroit contractor FAQ publishes $0.75–$1.50; HomeGuide aggregates $0.50–$3.00, with poor condition commonly toward $1.25–$3.00; and Homewyse calculates $1.72–$2.15 for smaller jobs as of January 2026.

For preservation: current national guides put scrub-and-recoat around $0.20–$0.40, with some $0.12–$0.22 references; burnishing around $0.04–$0.08; VCT strip-and-wax around $0.25–$0.50; and vinyl buffing around $0.10–$0.25. Job minimums often run $200–$400. Each is a check, not a local promise.

Sourced national comparison bands gathered July 2026; the local written quote follows measurement.
ServicePublished comparison bandBest-fit condition
Burnishing$0.04–$0.08/sq ftClean, bonded finish needs gloss recovery
Scrub and recoat$0.20–$0.40/sq ftTop finish worn; lower layers clean
Strip and wax$0.50–$1.50/sq ft normal planningEmbedded dirt, buildup, incompatibility, failure
Small-job minimum$200–$400 common referenceMobilization dominates limited area

Why does labor create most of the quote spread?

Published industry breakdowns place labor around 70%–80% of floor-care cost, with technician rates commonly $25–$60 per hour. Productivity for full strip work can be near 150 square feet per worker-hour in one published estimate for 3–4 coats, but condition, edges, rooms, equipment, and dry time can move production dramatically.

A 20,000-square-foot open hall allows long machine passes and fewer resets. The same area divided among 80 offices requires door-by-door clearing, hand edges, thresholds, corners, furniture moves, repeated setup, and room-level handback. Quotes can differ by 5 times because one assumes open area, one prices actual chopped-up work, and another describes only a lighter maintenance rung.

Which condition and process choices change the unit rate?

Finish depth, locked-in dirt, yellowing, black edge buildup, adhesive or tile damage, unusual residue, pH and rinsing needs, product solids, coat count, drying, and correction risk all affect work. A scrub that removes the top layer is much faster than chemical stripping to a clean stable substrate. Three thin coats and 5 thin coats also carry different material and closure time.

Ask every bidder to state the finish-removal endpoint, stripper or cleaner, slurry recovery, rinse and pH control, base and finish products, solids, gallons, measured area, coats, intervals, edges, and final cure. A price without those fields cannot show whether the bidder is efficient or simply omitting the process that protects adhesion.

How do furniture, access, and after-hours work affect price?

Furniture-moving and after-hours surcharges are common quote factors, but no reliable universal percentage was verified, so do not use invented add-on numbers. Count included chairs, tables, racks, files, fixtures, immovables, secure rooms, keys, alarms, loading access, HVAC, water, power, and the number of separate nights.

A weekend premium can still cost less than 5 night mobilizations. A higher open-area rate can include complete furniture reset and manager handback while a lower rate excludes both. Ask for base scope and line items by zone. Include Texas sales tax, because commercial cleaning services are generally taxable at 6.25% state plus applicable local tax up to 2%.

Why does the quote come after a walkthrough?

The walkthrough verifies that the floor is VCT rather than no-wax LVT, measures usable area rather than gross building area, tests whether dirt is above or inside the finish, maps furniture and edges, and checks the closure against 30–60 minute nominal coat intervals, humidity, HVAC, cure, and reset. Those facts determine both the maintenance rung and production rate.

The provider then gives a written quote with scope, units, taxes, schedule, exclusions, and change process. We do not publish a fabricated Corpus rate to create certainty before inspection. The promise is procedural: measure first, normalize the scope, write the price, and require authorization before added work.

How can you compare 3 bids without losing the important detail?

Put each proposal into one table: provider identity, floor type, zone area, open and obstructed square feet, furniture, maintenance rung, preparation, edge method, product, solids, gallons, coats, dry intervals, HVAC, nights, barricades, traffic release, reset, tax, total, unit price, alternates, and correction terms.

Ask a thinner bidder to price the same fields rather than deleting detail from the stronger scope. A $0.45 strip price without edge work, neutral rinse, furniture, or 4 coats is not cheaper than a $0.85 complete system until every omission has a cost. Preserve the walkthrough map so future annual comparisons use the same zones.

Questions people actually ask

What else should you know before scheduling?

Why do floor-waxing quotes vary by 5 times?

The bids may price different floor area, maintenance rungs, finish depth, room layout, furniture, edges, coat counts, after-hours access, HVAC, or minimums. One may describe burnishing while another includes full stripping and neutral rinsing. Normalize measured square feet, process, products, coats, schedule, tax, and exclusions before comparing the final number.

Is $0.30 per square foot a realistic strip-and-wax price?

It falls inside some published standard bands, especially for large open and favorable work, but it may also describe a scrub, thin scope, or excluded edges and furniture. Ask for the removal endpoint, measured area, labor assumptions, rinsing, product, gallons, 3–5 coats, access, and tax. Price alone cannot prove that a full strip is included.

Why is a small office expensive per square foot?

A $200–$400 common job minimum, travel, setup, chemistry, equipment, loading, security, and cleanup do not shrink with area. Small rooms also create hand edging, thresholds, furniture, and repeated starts. Ask the provider to show the minimum and obstructed-area labor. A 1,000-square-foot suite can reasonably price above a 20,000-square-foot open hall.

Does the written quote include Texas sales tax?

It should state tax clearly. Commercial cleaning services are generally subject to 6.25% Texas state sales tax plus applicable local sales tax, up to 2% more. Verify the provider's treatment for the actual service and location. Compare pre-tax scope and after-tax total so a bid that omits tax does not look artificially lower.

Can you give a binding quote without seeing the floor?

Photos and square footage can establish an early planning band, but a binding scope usually needs floor identification, condition testing, usable-zone measurement, furniture count, edges, access, HVAC, and reopening review. The provider's walkthrough determines whether the work is burnishing, recoat, stripping, or no-wax maintenance and supplies the written price for approval.

Measured scope before the floor closes

Ready to turn the appearance standard into a floor plan?

Call Corpus Christi Floor Waxing or send the form. We will schedule the next conversation, and the service provider will confirm the floor type, measured scope, reopening plan, and written price before you approve work.

(361) 310-1620